Awards*:1st Place - $3000; 2nd Place - $2000; 3rd Place - $1000Team Funding*: up to $675 rocket supplies and equipment, flight competition motor and flight data recorderTravel Funding*: based upon round trip travel to and from competition (see chart below)* Subject to availability of funds.

Rocketeers, University of Wisconsin - Fox Valley (2107)

Purpose: The Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium’s (WSGC) Collegiate Rocket Competition is intended to supply teams of affiliated university students with the opportunity to demonstrate engineering and design skills through direct application. It allows the teams to conceive, design, fabricate and compete with high powered rockets. The restrictions on rocket motors and dimensions are limited so that knowledge, creativity and imagination of the students are challenged. The end result is a great aerospace experience for students that would not otherwise be available in the region.

It is the purpose of this Announcement of Opportunity to support the innovative, visionary projects that are student-led and designed to fully realize WSGC’s goal of assisting in training the next generation of aerospace professionals.

About the Program: The Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium (WSGC) announces the Annual Collegiate Rocket Launch Design Competition. This competition is an opportunity for students to design and construct rockets to be launched at a competition in the spring from Richard Bong State Recreational Area, Kansasville, WI.

Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium (WSGC) will sponsor up to twelve (12) teams - one team per academic institution. To qualify for the competition, interested teams of 4-6 students will be required to submit a Notice of Intent to Compete, in which they name their team members and committed faculty mentor. Teams are allowed to seek advice from Industry, Tripoli, NAR, and others. Teams do not need to have prior rocket experience.Note: Teams selected to participate in the Collegiate Rocket Launch Competition may only receive funding for one WSGC sponsored rocket competition. Individuals selected to compete in the Collegiate Competition cannot compete on a Midwest High-Power Rocket Launch team, but are encouraged to shadow a Midwest High-Power Rocket Launch team. Only six (6) students can register per Collegiate team on the WSGC registration site.

If applying for both the Collegiate and Midwest Rocket Competition, please indicate in the Rocket Launch Team NOI which competition is the school’s preference.

Once the faculty advisor completes the Notice of Intent (NOI), identifies the team name, lists the known student participants, and chooses which competition the team will compete in, each student will need to:

compete without experience (Teams will be given the basic training and information required)

Groups of students wishing to be paired up with like-minded students at other affiliate institutions should contact the WSGC Institutional Representative for their campus. Members of groups underrepresented in aerospace disciplines are particularly encouraged to participate.

*Individual students cannot participate in more than four WI Collegiate Rocket Competitions.

Competition Engineering Parameters:

Student teams will be required to design, construct and fly a high-power rocket that will photograph a horizontal, 360-degree view of the terrain surrounding it following landing. In addition to being recovered safely and in flyable condition, its flight performance must be accurately predicted. Students must perform all work on the rocket - no professional assistance is permitted. The rocket is required to use electronic deployment of the recovery parachute and motor deployment as a backup. A downed rocket location aid must be included in the design. All structural components and materials must be obtained from reputable high powered rocketry vendors or an engineering analysis demonstrating their suitability must be included with the design. The winner of the flight portion of the competition will be the team whose rocket completes a safe, successful flight and whose rocket achieves an apogee closest to 3000 feet, as recorded by a competition-provided flight recorder.

The competition will include two written reports about the design, analysis, simulation, build, and test flight results of the rocket, an oral presentation, plus assessment of competition flight data results. A panel of professionals will score these from both academia and industry. Scoring of the pre-competition reports and the post-flight report will focus on the system design and its performance. More details about the competition motor, reports, deadlines, etc. are available in the competition handbook.

Teams whose schools are outside the following radius (round trip) measured from Richard Bong State Park, are eligible to claim:

<100 miles = $0 for mileage & lodging

>100miles<200miles = $75 mileage & 1 night hotel (maximum 2 rooms)

>200miles = $125 mileage 2 night hotel (maximum 2 rooms)NOTE: Teams must request travel funds and provide a Google map to the WSGC Program Office no later than January 08, 2018.

Lodging information/hotel block TBC.

Award Acceptance Components: As part of the award acceptance, 1st-3rd place awardees will be asked to attend and present at the Annual Wisconsin Space Conference as outlined in the award agreement and all participants will submit the following documents on the WSGC application website under Program Applications/Your Applications:

The WSGC Student Tools & Tips website is an excellent resource for all of your Collegiate Rocket Launch needs. If you cannot find your answer here, questions can be sent to the Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium at spacegrant@carthage.edu , Questions will be answered on an individual basis, and duplicate questions will be posted on WSGC’s Facebook Page.

This funding opportunity is made available for the pursuit of space-related research and/or activities through the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program: NASA Training Grant #NNX15AJ12H. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number for this award is 43.008.

All awards are fully competitive awards of opportunity in which applications are reviewed by a WSGC Technical Advisory Panel and other experts as needed. Awards are made by the Assistant Director based on recommendations from the Associate Director.

Do you have a talk you’d be willing to give at an affiliate campus? Register your availability as a speaker in the Space Grant Speakers Bureau. Looking for a speaker for your department seminar series? Check out the list of available speakers.

Dr. John Mather, 2006 Nobel Laureate in Physics, will speak on Tuesday, October 24th at 6 PM at Marquette University.Dr. J. Michael Kosterlitz, 2016 Nobel Laureate in Physics, will speak on Thursday, October 26 at 5 PM at UW-LaCrosse.